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South Sudan: UN concerned over swelling number of refugees

17 Apr 2014, 08:02 am Print

South Sudan: UN concerned over swelling number of refugees
New York, Apr 17 (JEN): Spiraling violence has forced an increasing number of civilians in South Sudan’s oil-rich Unity state are seeking refuge with the United Nations peacekeeping mission, it was confirmed on Wednesday.

“The numbers of internally displaced persons currently sheltered at the UNMISS protection of civilians site in Bentiu are swelling,” UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said referring to the acronym for the UN Mission in the country.
 
More than 12,000 civilians are currently seeking refuge, he noted. The majority of them are women and children.
 
The figure comes one day after reports that opposition forces took control of the state capital, Bentiu. UNMISS on Wednesdayreceived reports that anti-Government forces are also now controlling Guit and Rubkona Counties in Unity State.
 
UN military patrols also identified thousands of displaced civilians gathered in the vicinity of Bentiu Hospital and the compound of the UN World Food Programme (WFP).
 
Later in the day, an UNMISS official confirmed that the Mission had managed to get all remaining civilians out of the hospital and into a safe location.
 
Since the hostilities that erupted between the Government and opposition forces last December, an average of 75,000 civilianshave found refuge from violence in UN bases across the country.
 
UN ‘blue helmets’ conducted a number of patrols on Tuesday, including in Bentiu and Rubkona, where the Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) headquarters was described as “empty” with a few SPLA soldiers deployed in Bentiu.
 
Looting of shops by civilians in the state capital was also observed. The patrol also witnessed some 40 bodies on the streets in Bentiu, Dujarric said.
 
Speaking to journalists on Tuesday in Juba, UN Humanitarian Coordinator Toby Lanzer said the number of people seeking shelter in Bentiu doubled over the past few days to at least 9,000 people.
 
Lanzer said he felt “a certain sense of outrage”, as UNMISS, UN agencies and other aid agencies made efforts to deal withimmediate consequences of the ongoing violence.
 
About a million people in South Sudan have been forced from their homes due to the conflict. The UN continues to advocate with the country’s authorities for political and security solutions that will allow the displaced to return to their homes or seek abode in any other part of the country.
 
People fleeing violence in Bentiu, the capital of Unity state, South Sudan, arriving at UNMISS base on 15 April 2014 to seek shelter. Photo: UNMISS/Mihad Abdallah